LONDON — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is going through protests throughout the nation after signing a controversial invoice on Tuesday that critics say will neuter the independence of two distinguished anti-corruption our bodies.
As Ukrainian and Russian delegations put together to fulfill in Istanbul, Turkey, for a brand new spherical of ceasefire talks, Zelenskyy and his allies are going through a groundswell of opposition at residence.
On Tuesday, Zelenskyy signed a controversial legislation handed by parliament that can deliver the Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) and its accomplice group, the Specialised Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Workplace (SAPO), underneath the direct management of the Prosecutor Normal’s Workplace (PGO).
Each our bodies have been arrange within the aftermath of Ukraine’s pro-Western Maidan Revolution in 2014, with the intention of rooting out systemic corruption and serving to Kyiv reform its democratic system with a watch on European Union accession.
This {photograph} reveals a projection studying “Veto the legislation” on a constructing facade throughout an illustration in downtown Kyiv, Ukraine, on July 22, 2025.
Tetiana Dzhafarova/AFP through Getty Photographs
The passing of the brand new laws this week prompted protests in Kyiv and different main cities throughout Ukraine, with demonstrators even violating the nighttime curfew imposed as a guard in opposition to nightly Russian drone and missile strikes.
A spokesperson for the European Fee warned the transfer might undermine Ukraine’s potential bid to affix the EU. Kyiv’s European funding, they added, is “conditional on progress on transparency, judicial reform and democratic authorities.”
Transparency Worldwide’s Ukraine department, in the meantime, stated the transfer represented a “huge setback in anti-corruption reform” and a “direct menace to Ukraine’s path to the EU.”
The passage of the invoice adopted dozens of raids on NABU workers by officers from the Safety Service of Ukraine (SBU) and the PGO on Monday. Officers additionally started inspecting the dealing with of state secrets and techniques at SAPO.
Zelenskyy and his supporters have framed the measures as essential to root out Russian infiltration and affect inside Ukraine’s anti-corruption our bodies.
“The anti-corruption infrastructure will work,” Zelenskyy wrote on Telegram late on Tuesday. “Solely with out Russian influences — every thing must be cleansed of this. And there needs to be extra justice.”
“After all, NABU and SAPO will work. And it’s important that the Prosecutor Normal is decided to make sure that in Ukraine the inevitability of punishment for many who go in opposition to the legislation is actually ensured,” he added. “And that is what is actually wanted for Ukraine. The circumstances that have been pending should be investigated.”
“For years, officers who fled Ukraine have been dwelling peacefully overseas for some motive — in very good international locations and with out authorized penalties,” Zelenskyy continued.
“That is irregular. There isn’t any rational reason why felony proceedings price billions have been ‘hanging’ for years. And there’s no reason why the Russians can nonetheless get the data they want.”
“It’s important that there’s an inevitability of punishment and that society actually sees this,” the president wrote.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy attends parliament in Kyiv, Ukraine, on July 17, 2025.
Vadym Sarakhan/AP
The invoice was handed by the Ukrainian parliament — the Rada — by 263 representatives, having rapidly moved by committee. 13 MPs voted in opposition to, 13 abstained and 35 didn’t vote.
It was supported in parliament by members of Zelenskyy’s Servant of the Folks get together, in addition to former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko’s Batkivshchyna get together. The Opposition Platform – For Life get together, which is broadly thought of pro-Russian and has had a number of representatives accused of treason in the course of the warfare, additionally backed the measure.
Oleksandr Merezhko, a member of Zelenskyy’s get together and the chair of the parliament’s international affairs committee, advised ABC Information he backed the laws although admitted he had “some doubts” about its content material.
“I belief the president,” Merezkho stated. “In such circumstances I usually additionally belief the choice of the committee.”
Merezhko stated his issues have been over “what penalties it might need from the attitude of the negotiations with the EU on our membership.”
European counterparts, Merezhko continued, “are anxious and they’re asking questions. I feel that we’d like higher communication with our European companions on that difficulty.”
“There is perhaps some delicate elements which want clear rationalization to our companions by the president,” he added. “I am personally in favor of the independence of the anti-corruption our bodies. However I am additionally in favor of the true rule of legislation of the state in Ukraine.”
Zelenskyy’s choice to signal the divisive invoice has piqued concern of an anti-democratic energy seize by the president and his inside circle — chief amongst them Andriy Yermak, the pinnacle of the presidential workplace.
A former Ukrainian official, who requested to not be recognized for worry of reprisal, advised ABC Information, “We aren’t dropping the warfare as a result of the West didn’t give us sufficient weapons. We’re dropping the warfare due to corruption, lack {of professional} administration and since many don’t see why they need to battle for Zelenskyy’s autocracy.”
“Yermak is only a good implementor of Zelenskyy’s will,” the previous official added.

Protesters chant whereas holding banners throughout a protest in opposition to a legislation focusing on anti-corruption establishments in central Kyiv, Ukraine, on July 22, 2025.
Alex Babenko/AP
Vitaliy Shabunin, a distinguished Ukrainian anti-corruption activist who beforehand headed the primary Public Oversight Council at NABU, stated the invoice will enable the prosecutor normal — who’s appointed by the president — to “shut down all investigations involving the president’s mates.”
Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko — who has repeatedly clashed with Zelenskyy’s administration throughout Russia’s full-scale warfare — joined protesters within the capital on Tuesday.
The brand new measure, he wrote on Telegram, “undoubtedly doesn’t deliver Ukraine nearer to the European Union. It actually doesn’t deliver it nearer to democracy, the rule of legislation, and legality — to these values for which our troopers are dying in the present day in a bloody battle in opposition to the aggressor.”
Proponents of the invoice “are dragging Ukraine sooner and sooner into authoritarianism,” the mayor added, “hiding behind the warfare, destroying anti-corruption our bodies, native self-government, silencing activists and journalists.”
“Sure, there are various questions concerning the independence, impartiality, and adherence to authorized procedures by all legislation enforcement businesses,” Klitschko continued. “However the system must be modified, not changed into a bulldog of the authorities.”
“And we should not neglect that in the end, all actions should be accounted for — each politically and legally,” the mayor wrote.
ABC Information’ Will Gretsky contributed to this report.